Sunday, November 30, 2008
Waking up - by LA
Various drugs have been turned off and his sedation level has been lightened. This means that he can move his legs a bit and is clearly uncomfortable at times. I guess that’s not surprising given that he has something like a garden hose jammed down the back of his throat.
His nurse of the last couple of days (Rosie who is fantastic) said this morning. “He’s coming out of this just like a young man should; like a bull at a gate.”
It's great seeing his eyes open a bit. It's even better seeing his eyes without the look of total confusion they had before he was intubated and sedated.
We are very grateful to the staff in ICU. They are dedicated, professional and caring. Thank you so much to you all.
Cheers for now and thanks to all of you too. We’ll keep trying to keep you up on the latest.
LA
Prayer meeting change of time and news of Ben
As for Ben: sometimes he wakes up a little and in those moments he is becoming more aware of things although it's obvious his awareness is very foggy. The doctors are happy with his progress this morning and anticipate another couple of days preparation before taking out the respiratory tube.
Saturday, November 29, 2008
The long wake up
three day process of getting him ready to wake up. This means a less
deep sleep and some discomfort. More updates tomorrow.
The numbers
numbers on the screen. Temperature 37.2, blood pressure 141/70 (mean
of 89), heart rate 96, blood oxygen saturation 97%, respiration 15 per
minute, central venous pressure 10, time 6:51. This morning things are
still stable.
Friday, November 28, 2008
Thursday, November 27, 2008
From LA
want to tell people that Ben is even slightly improved because then
they'll stop praying." Please don't. But he is improving. His oxygen
level on the ventilator is down, his neutrophils (which fight
infection) are up, his temperature is down and his blood pressure is
stable. We are very thankful. The ICU staff will keep monitoring him
over the next couple of days and all being well, they will be able to
remove his breathing tube and wake him up.
In the meantime Ben is trying to inflict grievous bodily harm on his
carers. His night nurse is sure he has a hand injury from Ben crushing
his hand in one slightly more wakeful episode. Pushing and shoving
while he was quite confused he nearly managed to escape from his bed
with his 5,000 tubes trailing behind him. While it's not pleasant
watching these episodes we can't help seeing it as a sign of Ben's
famous fighting spirit.
On the home front, we ate Chicken Townhouse last night. I know, I
know, it's like the end of an era. We hope there won't be a collective
global 'groan' at this news. We took a photo to post later today. And
don't be sad for Ben. There is more Chicken Townhouse where that came
from.
We still want to say thankyou to so many people for their acts and
thoughts of kindness. So many messages, so many meals, and such great
hospital staff. Thank you.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Hanging on
His blood levels are rising slowly so we hope to see some improvement
soon. Our constant plea is "Hang in there Ben" so Michael sent us a
photo to illustrate. (Yes it is a genuine photo, but not of Ben.)
Chris
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
You're a brilliant team - Thank you!
well. Doctors and nurses and admin. people and kitchen staff and
cleaners. It's so hard to express how much we appreciate your care.
Thank you! You are doing a fantastic job.
Thanks to everyone:
- to a caring consultant T. who everyone speaks so highly of, and his
chirpy assistant L. who is always friendly and helpful. And of course
the lovely registrar HL who is willing to massage backs on her knees
in the corridor (it's great to see you back!) and A and J who were
always willing to answer our questions.
- to all the fantastic nursing and other staff in 3W who feel like
family at our home away from home: to K and Y and S and J and L and K
and the other L and the other S and the two N's (one with a double k)
and R (did your Dad get it wrong?) and K and D and A and E and S and L
and J and K and J and A and J and M and N and E and M and M and
another two L's and E and F and K and A and M. Also E and K and S and
M. And the support staff: S and J (muchas gracias J por hablar en
Español con Benjamín!) and R and R and J on the phone and N trying to
keep us all clean. Thanks guys so much! We hope Ben will be back with
you soon.
- and to the great team in ICU: to those who give Ben the intensive
care he needs: S and S and J and J and A and L and S (who will move on
to higher places next year) and also to V and C and R and R and G. And to the doctors who do a professional job and keep us in the loop too: G and C and M and E and D and more whose names I've forgotten.
- and to M and her team in the kitchen who provide large plates of hot chips at odd hours and who check up him in ICU.
- and to those we've forgotten to mention in our list of letters: just pick your own please: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ, and sorry for forgetting you!
So, on behalf of the family and all Ben's friends who love him so
much: thank you to all.
Meanwhile, this morning Ben is still in critical but stable condition.
Chris
Monday, November 24, 2008
Sleeping Beauty - from Chris
Sunday, November 23, 2008
From TC
It's been a long 72hrs and an even longer 2 or 3 hrs. As you know
Ben's been in Intensive Care for the last three days. His temperatures
have been up and down and his breathing has been very disturbed and
rapid. It wouldn't be inaccurate to say that he's been fighting for
his life.
He's been getting chest X-rays once or twice a day to check his lungs
for fluid. At seven tonight he had another X-ray which revealed high
levels of fluid on his lungs and he had become severly agitated just
before that, breathing 60 times a minute (15-20 or so is normal) and
perspiring a lot. At this point the staff decided that he had to be
intubated urgently. So he had five nurses and a doctor around him all
moving quite fast, organising the procedure.
This wasn't a "hey how about we put a tube down him so he's more at
peace?" It was a, "this is urgent, if we don't get his breathing
sorted out very soon he's going to be in serious trouble". This is
Intensive Care we're talking about: you only work quickly if it's
serious.
The procedure went well and Ben's now breathing more peacefully on a
ventilator but he is in an induced coma and will be asleep for around
a week the medics think. His condition is very severe and he is no
doubt fighting for his life. He's shown a lot of bravery and no
bitterness but is still in a serious condition. Keep praying and
fighting with him.
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Getting better?
improvement. His temperature is back to almost normal as is his blood
pressure. He is still very confused but occasionally shows signs of
recognition and sense. If he does keep improving he may be out of ICU
on Monday.
Friday, November 21, 2008
From TC-Friday 7pm
multiple hoses and cables. He's not overly responsive but gives the
occasional indication that he's still holding on. Keep him in your
prayers - it's a difficult time and he needs your support.
ICU still
quite confused, has a high temperature and his blood pressure is
dropping. (He won't be getting or answering messages on his phone until
he improves considerably!) Thank you for your prayers and care.
Chris and the family
ICU
Legs
LA
PS Don’t give up on the chicken townhouse. It’s still waiting. We might have to eat it without Ben.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Quick update
to have an infection and is running temperatures of about 40C. His
blood pressure also dropped last night. The source of the infection is
not known (or perhaps it is lymphoma and not infection?) and he is on
antibiotics, antivirals and antifungals as well as blood and platelets
and numerous other concoctions. He also decided to use a GCSF again to
promote white blood cell production but it gave him excruciating bone
pain the last two times.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Messaging
see how he's going. I try and send a different message everytime. This
morning our conversation went like this:
Chris: "?"
Ben: "!"
5 minutes later:
Ben: "Platelets are 5, so nose bleeding understandable. I'll get
some this morning. Morphine is an all-rounder and fixes my mouth
almost completely alongside panadol which was a relief. Temp is back
to normal but they're doing antibiotics and blood cultures. Think I'll
be in here for the moment. I slept some from 4am onwards, nothing
before. Not sure why, cos I had no pain. there's your update."
Chris: "Great report. Can I blog it?"
Ben: "Thought you'd say that. Yeah."
Monday, November 17, 2008
avagoodweegen
We've seen signs of the old Ben this weekend. Not quite cracking jokes and hanging it on his brothers but not far off. MD said that he and Ben had had breakfast together on Saturday morning, just the two of them. 'He didn't say anything' said M 'and so I didn't either'.
On Saturday he and Sally sat in the sun on the driveway. A small
enthusiastic dog with his owner was very excited to see him and with
furiously wagging tail he inspected Ben. The threat of being licked
mercilessly was a worry. The combo. of dog lick, still oozing scar,
and low blood counts (and falling over the next few days) did not
seem a good idea. So the dog was sent on his way. Last night Ben went
to a friend's 21st party where he met up with lots of the old gang,
many of whom he hadn't seen during the month in hospital.
Yesterday he sat outside again sunning his incision scar. He also read
a book. I know that might sound a bit strange to mention but he
honestly hasn't had the concentration or the interest to do anything
for over a month now, so reading a book was something to do with
connecting with life again. He had his afternoon hospital appointment
at about six and then went to church.
Oh... an apology to my Mother, the most unassuming chicken townhouse
cook! According to reliable sources, the photo makes her meal look
like something you might (or might not) feed to your dog. It is
however not anything you'd give to your dog and it's a general
favourite with anyone who has eaten it. A friend dropped in a beef
casserole last night. She called it a 'beef shack' casserole, because
she couldn't claim it had reached the lofty heights of a 'townhouse'.
LA
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Stop the press
Friday, November 14, 2008
Obvious questions...
I think the obvious questions are the ones people might want to ask... at least that's what I tell students. Answer: Ben's on his third type of chemo. First it was CHEOP (an acronym named after the drugs involved) which is given intravenously for a couple of hours every fortnight. But that didn't seem to control the lyphoma. Then it was PACE-BOM, a two weekly cycle, again given by i.v. for a few hours, with PACE one week and BOM the next. But again it didn't seem to be effective enough and when infections delayed the chemo the lymphoma advanced rapidly.
So now it is "dose adjusted EPOCH" which is stronger than the previous regimes. This one involves giving the drugs continuously for four days and then three or four weeks to recover enough to start again. So Ben was on the chemo from last Friday for four days. Now he just needs anti-viral drugs every 12 hours. The idea was that he would visit the hospital twice a day for that but with his total exhaustion and some pain from the operation it seems better if he stays in hospital for the moment. The chicken townhouse will have to wait.
The Continuing Saga of…
‘Chicken salt’ really had the kitchen staff wondering the other day. The menu lady was quite sure that they didn’t have chicken salt but said she’d check. They did have it and it appeared on Ben's lunch tray to go with his large helping of chips and can of Lift.
Could food be the reason he has gone back to hospital? Maybe I’ll see if they can do ‘Hospital kitchen in the home’. And what of the chicken townhouse? I shall keep you posted. Thanks for all your letters and love. LA
PS from Chris: Ben is staying in hospital because of stomach pain. We hope it is just a post-op thing and not lymphoma.
Nothing much to report.
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
He didn’t feel like chicken townhouse anyway
I can't help wondering if he's going to wish he was back in hospital before long. It's noisy here. It's busy here. It's not nearly as convenient as a hospital and there is no buzzer to call a cheerful attentive nurse to his side. If he had a buzzer (what a dreadful idea) the most he'd get would be a harried mother who would take far too long to answer his summons.
We love having him home already but I wish he felt better than he does. Please hang in there with him. This is likely to be a long and severe journey. Thanks for all you've all done in different ways.
LA
Home again. Home again?
At this stage of the day it looks like my caution has paid off. We're now not sure he will be home today because they can't provide a 'hospital in the home' visitor to give him the last of some chemo. It seems that things change all the time; I imagine Ben might be a bit frustrated. On the other hand this chemo round has worn him out so much that he might be too pooped to care one way or the other. I'll let you know how we go.
LA
Monday, November 10, 2008
Anyone for sunnies?
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Just when hospital food was getting boring...
Chris
So far so good... by LA
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Hang in there Ben - From LA
Here we go again...
Meanwhile he has heard that his application to study medicine has not been initially successful although further offers will be made in the next month or so. You can imagine that this leaves Ben in a state of chaos and uncertainty.
Friday, November 7, 2008
Hospital can be so boring!
After 4 weeks in hospital things can get pretty boring. Add to that various tired family members at midnight and it's a recipe for disaster.
Is that really Macdonald's chocolate thick shake Ben is having intravenously? (Click on the pictures for a closer inspection.)
And now what is Ben getting up to? Taking TC's temperature while AC stands guard to make sure a nurse doesn't catch them?
Thursday, November 6, 2008
The details... by Dr Chris
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
PIC versus Hickman - from LA
It's looking hopeful that Ben will be able to start his new chemo regime tomorrow. The new regime is a step up (agan) to a very potent (the most potent) concoction. It involves four days of continuous chemo and then a month off to recover. It's not for the faint hearted this cancer journey!
When I went in to say hi this morning a physio and Ben's nurse were getting ready to take him for his first post-operative walk. It reminded me of 'Pride and Prejudice' (the BBC version) when Elizabeth Bennet is urged to take a 'turn about the room' because it is 'so refreshing'!
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Waiting...
LA
Monday, November 3, 2008
Fighting fit!
So now we wait for Ben to be well enough for more chemotherapy. He will go on to a more aggressive chemo regime which involves a number of days of constant chemo followed by a month recovery time before the next round.
Thank you so much to everyone for your thoughts and prayers.
Chris
Sunday, November 2, 2008
All's well...
Chris
Saturday, November 1, 2008
From TC
Just a quick note about Ben's phone and its usage. Ben's on an antiobiotic which for some reason has (expectedly) caused his fingertips to go numb which means that messaging is difficult. This is why sometimes messages back will be scarce or non-existent. Please don't take this personally and please don't let it stop you messaging him. I think encouraging messages are important and just keep him occupied, just don't necessarily expect one back!
Thanks for the support, keep it up!
TC